Book Review
Follow these steps when completing your book review. Remember, follow the steps but do not write them just as steps. Try and write it as a full report but use the steps as a guide:
1 - Name of book, author, year first published.
2 - What genre is the book?
3 - Who is the intended target audience (age group, gender, any special interests?) Why?
4 - What is the story about? (don't give away the ending or spoil parts for anyone)
5 - What was good about the book, what was not so good, why?
6 - Your overall opinion of the book and why? Give it a rating out of 10.
The bicycle
and the sweet-shop
When I was seven, my mother decided I should leave
kindergarten and go to a proper boy’s school.
By good fortune, there existed a well-known Preparatory School for boys
about a mile from our house. It was
called Llandaff Cathedral School, and it stood right under the shadow of
Llandaff cathedral. Like the cathedral,
the school is still there and still flourishing.
But here again I can remember very little of the two years I
spent at Llandaff Cathedral School, between the age of seven and nine, Only two moments remain clearly in my
mind. The first lasted not more than
five seconds but I will never forget it.
It was my first term and I was walking home alone across the
village green after school when suddenly one of the senior twelve-year-old boys
came riding full speed down the road on his bicycle about twenty yards away
from me. The road was on a hill and the
boy was going down the slope, and as he flashed by he started backpedalling
very quickly so that the free-wheeling mechanism of his bike made a loud
whirring sound. At the same time, he
took his hands off the handlebars and folded them casually across his
chest. I stopped dead and stared after
him. How wonderful he was! How swift and brave and graceful in his long
trousers with bicycle clips around them and his scarlet school cap at a jaunty
angle on his head! One day, I told
myself, one glorious day I will have a bike like that and I will wear long
trousers with bicycle-clips and my school cap will sit jaunty on my head and I
will go whizzing down the hill pedalling backwards with no hands on the
handlebars!
I promise you that if somebody had caught me by the shoulder
at that moment and said to me, ‘What is your greatest wish in life, little boy?
What is your absolute ambition? To be a doctor? A fine musician? A painter? A
writer? Or the Lord Chancellor?’ I would
have answered without hesitation that my only ambition, my hope, my longing was
to have a bike like that and to go whizzing down the hill with no hands on the
handlebars. It would be fabulous. It made me tremble just to think about it.
My second and only other memory of Llandaff Cathedral School
is extremely bizarre. It happened a
little over a year later, when I was just nine.
By then I had made some friends and when I walked to school in the
morning I would start off alone but would pick up four other boys of my own age
along the way. After school was over,
the same four boys and I would set out together across the village green and
through the village itself, heading for home.
On the way to school and on the way back we always passed the
sweet-shop. No we didn’t, we never
passed it. We always stopped. We lingered outside its rather small window
gazing in at the big glass jars full of Bull’s Eyes and Old Fashioned Humbugs
and Strawberry Bonbons and Glacier Mints and Acid Drops and Pear Drops and
Lemon Drops and all the rest of them.
Each of us received sixpence a week for pocket-money, and whenever there
was any money in our pockets, we would all troop together to buy a pennyworth
of this or that. My own favourites were
Sherbet Suckers or Liquorice Bootlaces.
One of the other boys, whose name was Thwaites, told me I
should never eat Liquorice Bootlaces.
Thwaites’s father, who was a doctor, had said they were made from rat’s
blood. The father had given his young
son a lecture about Liquorice Bootlaces when he had caught him eating one in
bed. ‘Every ratcatcher in the country’,
the father had said, ‘takes his rats to the Liquorice Bootlace Factory, and the
manager pays tuppence for each rat. Many
a ratcatcher has become a millionaire by selling his dead rats to the Factory.’
‘But how do they turn the rats into liquorice?’ the young
Thwaites had asked his father.
‘They wait until they’ve got ten thousand rats,’ the father
had answered ‘then they dump them all into a huge shiny steel cauldron and boil
them up for several hours. Two men stir
the bubbling cauldron with long poles and in the end they have a thick,
steaming rat-stew. After that, a
cruncher is lowered into the cauldron to crunch the bones, and what’s left is a
pulpy substance called rat-mash.’
‘Yes, but how do they turn that into Liquorice Bootlaces,
Daddy?’ the young Thwaites had asked, and this question, according to Thwaites,
had caused his father to pause and think for a few moments before he answered
it. At last he had said, ‘The two men
who were doing the stirring with the long poles now put on their wellington
boots and climb into the cauldron and shovel the hot rat-mash out onto a
concrete floor. Then they run a
steam-roller over it several times to flatten it out. What is left looks rather like a giant black
pancake, and all they have to do after that is wait for it to cool and to
harden so they can cut it up into strips to make the Bootlaces. Don’t ever eat them,’ the father had said.
‘If you do, you’ll get ratitis.’
‘What is ratitis, Daddy?’ young Thwaites had asked.
‘All the rats that the rat-catchers catch are poisoned with
rat-poison,’ the father had said. ‘It’s the rat-poison that gives you ratitis.”
‘Yes, but what happens to you when you catch it?’ young
Thwaites had asked.
‘Your teeth become sharp and pointed,’ the father had
answered. ‘And a short stumpy tail grows out of your back just above your
bottom. There is no cure for
ratitis. I ought to know. I’m a doctor.’
We all enjoyed Thwaites’s story and we made him tell it to us
many times on our walks to and from school.
But it didn’t stop any of us except Thwaites from buying Liquorice
Bootlaces. At two for a penny, they were
the best value in the shop. A Bootlace,
in case you haven’t had the pleasure of handling one, is not round. It’s like a flat black tape about
half-an-inch wide. You buy it rolled up
in a coil, and in those days it used to be so long that when you unrolled it
and held one end at arm’s length above your head, the other end touched the
ground.
Sherbet Suckers were also two a penny. Each sucker consisted of a yellow cardboard
tube filled with sherbet powder, and there was a hollow liquorice straw
sticking out of it. (Rat’s blood again, young Thwaites would warn us, pointing
at the liquorice straw.) You sucked the
sherbet up through the straw and when it was finished you ate the
liquorice. They were delicious, those
Sherbet Suckers. The sherbet fizzed in
your mouth, and if you knew how to do it, you could make white froth come out
of your nostrils and pretend you were throwing a fit.
Gobstoppers, costing a penny each, were enormous hard round
balls the size of small tomatoes. One
Gobstopper would provide about an hour’s worth of non-stop sucking and if you
took it out of your mouth and inspected it every five minutes or so, you would
find that it had changed colour. There
was something fascinating about the way it went from pink to blue to green to
yellow. We used to wonder how in the
world the Gobstopper Factory managed to achieve this magic. ‘How does
it happen?’ we would ask each other, ‘How can
they make it keep changing colour?’
‘It’s your spit that does it,’ young Thwaites
proclaimed. As the son of a doctor, he
considered himself to be an authority on all things that had to do with the
body. He could tell us about scabs and
when they were ready to be picked off.
He knew why a black eye was blue and why blood was red. ‘It’s your spit that makes the Gobstopper
change colour,’ he kept insisting. When
we asked him to elaborate on his theory, he answered, ‘You wouldn’t understand
me if I did tell you.’
Pear Drops were exciting because they had a dangerous
taste. They smelled of nail-varnish and
they froze the back of your throat. All
of us were warned against eating them and the result was we ate them more than
ever.
Then there was a hard brown lozenge called the Tonsil
Tickler. The Tonsil Tickler tasted and
smelled very strongly of chloroform. We
had not the slightest doubt that these things were saturated in the dreaded
anaesthetic which, as Thwaites had many times pointed out to us, could put you
to sleep for hours at a stretch. ‘If my
father has to saw off somebody’s leg,’ he said, ‘he pours chloroform on to a
pad and the person sniffs it and goes to sleep and my father saws his leg off
without him even feeling it.’
‘But why do they put it into sweets and sell them to us,’ we
asked him.
You might think a question like this would have baffled
Thwaites. But Thwaites was never
baffled. ‘My father says Tonsil Ticklers
were invented for dangerous prisoners in jail,’ he said. ‘They give them one with each meal and the
chloroform makes them sleepy and stops them rioting.’
‘Yes,’ we said, ‘but why sell them to children?’
‘It’s a plot,’ Thwaites said.
‘A grown-up plot to keep us quiet.’
The sweet-shop in Llandaff in the year 1923 was the very
centre of our lives. To us, it was what
a bar is to a drunk, or a church is to a Bishop. Without it, there would have been little to
live for. But it had one terrible
drawback, this sweet-shop. The woman who
owned it was a horror. We hated her and
we had good reason for doing so.
Her name was Mrs. Pratchett.
She was a small skinny old hag with a moustache on her upper lip and a mouth
as sour as a green gooseberry. She never
smiled. She never welcomed us when we
went in, and the only times she spoke were when she said things like, ‘I’m
watchin’ you so keep yer thievin’ fingers off them chocolates!’ Or ‘I don’t
want you in ‘ere just to look around! Either you forks out or you gets
out!’
But by far the most loathsome thing about Mrs. Pratchett was
the filth that clung around her. Her
apron was grey and greasy. Her blouse
had bits of breakfast all over it, toast-crumbs and tea stains and splotches of
dried egg-yolk. It was her hands,
however, that disturbed us most. They
were disgusting. They were black with
dirt and grime. They looked as though
they had been putting lumps of coal on the fire all day long. And do not forget please that it was these
very hands and fingers that she plunged into the sweet-jars when we asked for a
pennyworth of Treacle Toffee or Wine Gums or Nut Clusters or whatever. There were precious few health laws in those
days, and nobody, least of all Mrs. Pratchett, ever thought of using a little
shovel for getting out the sweets as they do today. The mere sight of her grimy right hand with
its black fingernails digging an ounce of Chocolate Fudge out of a jar would have
caused a starving tramp to go running from the shop. But not us.
Sweets were our life-blood. We
would have put up with far worse than that to get them. So we simply stood and watched in sullen
silence while this disgusting old woman stirred around inside the jars with her
foul fingers.
The other thing we hated Mrs. Pratchett for was her
meanness. Unless you spent a whole
sixpence in one go, she wouldn’t give you a bag. Instead you got your sweets twisted up in a
small piece of newspaper which she tore off a pile of old Daily Mirrors lying on the counter.
So you can understand why we had it in for Mrs. Pratchett in
a big way, but we didn’t quite know what to do about it. Many schemes were put forward but none of
them was any good. None of them, that
is, until suddenly, one memorable afternoon, we found the dead mouse.
The Great
Mouse Plot
My four friends and I had come across a loose floor-board at
the back of the classroom, and when we prised it up with the blade of a
pocket-knife, we discovered a big hollow space underneath. This, we decided, would be our secret
hiding-place for sweets and other small treasures such as conkers and
monkey-nuts and birds’ eggs. Every
afternoon, when the last lesson was over, the five of us would wait until the classroom
had emptied, then we would lift up the floor-board and examine our secret
hoard, perhaps adding to it or taking something away.
One day, when we lifted it up, we found a dead mouse lying
among our treasures. It was an exciting
discovery. Thwaites took it out by its
tail and waved it in front of our faces.
‘What shall we do with it?’ he cried.
‘It stinks!’ someone shouted. ‘Throw it out of the window
quick!’
‘Hold on a tick,’ I said.
‘Don’t throw it away.’
Thwaites hesitated.
They all looked at me.
When writing about oneself, one must strive to be
truthful. Truth is more important than
modesty. I must tell you, therefore,
that it was I and I alone who had the idea for the great and daring Mouse Plot. We all have our moments of brilliance and
glory, and this was mine.
‘Why don’t we,’ I said, ‘slip it into one of Mrs. Pratchett’s
jars of sweets? Then when she puts her
dirty hands into grab a handful, she’ll grab a stinky dead mouse instead.’
The other four stared at me in wonder. Then, as the sheer genius of the plot began
to sink in, they all started grinning.
They slapped me on the back. They
cheered me and danced around the classroom.
‘We’ll do it today!’ they cried.
‘We’ll do it on the way home! You had
the idea,’ they said to me, ‘so you can
be the one to put the mouse in the jar.’
Thwaites handed me the mouse.
I put it into my trouser pocket.
Then the five of us left the school, crossed the village green and
headed for the sweet-shop. We were
tremendously jazzed up. We felt like a
gang of desperados setting out to rob a train or blow up the sheriff’s office.
‘Make sure you put it into a jar that is used often,’
somebody said.
‘I’m putting it in Gobstoppers,’ I said. ‘The Gobstopper jar is never behind the
counter.’
‘I’ve got a penny,’ Thwaites said, ‘so I’ll ask for one
Sherbet Sucker and one Bootlace. And
while she turns away to get them, you slip the mouse in quickly with the
Gobstoppers.’
Thus everything was arranged.
We were strutting a little as we entered the shop. We were the victors now and Mrs. Pratchett
was the victim. She stood behind the
counter and her small malignant pig-eyes watched us suspiciously as we came
forward.
‘One Sherbet Sucker, please,’ Thwaites said to her, holding
out his penny.
I kept to the rear of the group, and when I saw Mrs.
Pratchett turn her head away for a couple of seconds to fish a Sherbet Sucker
out of the box, I lifted the heavy glass lid of the Gobstopper jar and dropped
the mouse in. Then I replaced the lid as
silently as possible. My heart was
thumping like mad and my hands had gone all sweaty.
‘And one Bootlace, please,’ I heard Thwaites saying. When I turned round, I saw Mrs. Pratchett
holding out the Bootlace in her filthy fingers.
‘I don’t want all of you lot troopin’ in ‘ere if only one of
you is buyin’,’ she screamed at us. ‘Now
beat it! Go on! Get out!’
As soon as we were outside, we broke into a run. ‘Did you do
it?’ they shouted at me.
‘Of course I did!’ I said.
‘Well done you!’ they cried.
‘What a super show!’
I felt like a hero. I was a hero. It was marvellous to be so popular.
Here is a link to an extract from Roald Dahl's Boy
Holes - Study Questions
Hi class! Today you will be completing study questions on the first 7 chapters of the novel Holes.
Here's the link.
Begin with Chapter One and work through to 6 and 7. If you did not bring a device to class, then please share with the person next to you.
Thank you.

mr why did u send us the hare and the tortuse
ReplyDeletemr we can't see the pictures
ReplyDelete1 - Name of book, author, year first published.
ReplyDeletename of book: liar liar. the aurthor: Gary Paulsen. publish date: 2011
2 - What genre is the book?
the genre of this book is funny
3 - Who is the intended target audience (age group, gender, any special interests?) Why?
i think this book is for ages around 11+ because it talkes about a 14 year old boy, a liar, how he gets away with it.
4 - What is the story about? (don't give away the ending or spoil parts for anyone)
its about a 14 year old boy, Kevin, he always lies to people and doesnt get in trouble.
5 - What was good about the book, what was not so good, why?
i like the story because its good.
6 - Your overall opinion of the book and why? Give it a rating out of 10
9.5/10
1. the title of the book is unravelling. The author of the book is called Margaret Gurevich. Published date: 2015
ReplyDelete2. The genre of the book is adventure
3. I think the target audience is for kids above 9 till 17 or less because the book talks about designers and competition stuff.
4. Its about a girl who is a designer, she travels to New York City to participate in a competition.
5. The book was good for me because i love designing but the negative thing about the book is that is a veryy long book, with long chapters
6. 8/10